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This week at LWN: Fighting image spam

08/25/2006  IIIIIII
Relevance: 7.75
A number of spammers have been evading filters like SpamAssassin (SA) recently by encoding their messages as images. SA already has a set of rules that are meant to combat image spam, but the more recent messages (typically for stock scams or pharmacy products) have been crafted to avoid them. This would indicate, once again, that spammers are using SA to pre-test their messages and are modifying them to get through. SA developers, however, are up to the challenge and two specific countermeasures have been released.
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HIG Hunting Season in its 3rd Week

05/27/2007  IIIII
Relevance: 6.63
Are you fed up with cryptic error messages you don't understand? Then get involved! This week's target of the HIG Hunting Season is warnings and error messages.
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A Little Linux and Unix Humor - Error Messages

07/12/2008  II
Relevance: 6.57
A list I found on the net of some hilarious error messages. Possibly for the Linux and Unix enthusiast only ;)
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Six Twitter clients for the Linux desktop and one for the road

04/30/2008  I
Relevance: 6.48
Twitter is a popular social networking utility that's gaining popularity as a micro-blogging tool. Registered users can post messages -- also called Tweets -- via the Web interface, but many prefer to use desktop applications that offer additional functionality and move Tweeting out of the browser entirely. Qt Twitter Linux is a barebones KDE client developed with Qt and C++. Since it was built using Twitter's APIs, messages sent via this tool appear instantaneously in Twitter's timeline as if they were sent directly from the Web-based interface (all Tweets show what app the sender uses by default). While Qt Twitter Linux doesn't come with handy features such as search and archive, it's great for dashing off quick messages.
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Simulators for IP Multimedia Subsystem

05/24/2007  I
Relevance: 6.47
This article shows you how to get started installing andconfiguring WebSphere MQ on Linux and developing Java applications for the MQ environment, using sample applications for sending messages to and receiving messages from a queue.
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Translating Messages in Second Life

05/12/2007  IIIIII
Relevance: 6.42
In the last part of our exploration of the Second Life software, learnhow to plug a simple command-line program into Second Life that provides a language translation function. This article looks at the technical issues involved in translating chat messages in Second Life.
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Tidy up your mailboxes with Archivemail

11/13/2008  I
Relevance: 6.42
Over time, people tend to accumulate a large number of messages in various email accounts, most of which they never bother with again. The problem is particularly acute for administrator accounts that receive routine notifications of events that are viewed, if at all, no more than once. The archivemail tool lets you easily archive these old messages and thereby free up some disk space and improve your mail client's performance.
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Encrypt and sign Gmail messages with FireGPG

06/05/2007  II
Relevance: 6.23
Gmail may be an excellent Web-based email application, but there is no easy way to use it with privacy tools like GnuPG. The FireGPG extension for Firefox is designed to solve this problem. It integrates nicely into Gmail's interface and allows you to sign and encrypt not only email messages but also text snippets from any Web page.
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More Funny Unix, Linux and Mainframe Error Messages

08/30/2008  I
Relevance: 6.10
Trolling the net some more, I found a whole ton of funny Unix, Linux, mainframe, compiler, VAX, VMS, etc, error messages and I think we have enough material to span two posts here. So, in effect, today's post is also a"live test" of how long a blogspot posting can be. If it overruns, and the bottom gets clipped, you can get the material from its source at TMK.com.
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Reducing spam with OpenBSD and spamd

04/12/2007  II
Relevance: 5.97
We all know about the rampant spam email problem. Nearly all of the potential solutions offered for it are based on the idea of the mail server receiving messages, classifying them as either spam or legitimate, and then processing further (deleting or forwarding messages) as appropriate. The problem with this strategy is that you end up using extra resources on the mail server. Here's a way to get the same result while minimizing resource usage by preventing the spam from reaching the mail server.
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